FREE Comics Manga Download

FREE Comics Manga Download
FREE Comics Manga Download
Showing posts with label Marvel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marvel. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Uncovering the secret origin of mutants at Marvel

Tweet Panel from Lee & Ditko's 1963 "The Man In The Sky"

With the X-Men: First Class movie in theaters making people thing about the early days of homo superior, their origins go deeper than you think. Although it’s widely thought that Stan Lee & Jacky Kirby first introduced the ideas of mutants in the pages of 1963′s X-Men #1, the real story is buried deep in Marvel and Timely lore.

The first mutant story ever published by Marvel was 1952′s “The Weird Woman” in Amazing Detective Cases #11, in which a self-described “mutant” woman is searching, unsuccessfully, to find someone like her for companionship. That doesn’t even begin to consider Namor, which debuted in 1939 as one of comics first super-heroes. It took more than 20 years for Marvel to reclassify him as a mutant (in 1964′s X-Men #6),  but he’s finally come full circle as a card-carrying X-Man in Matt Fraction’s Uncanny X-Men run. Marvel’s claim of Namor being “Marvel’s First Mutant” are true from a publication debut standpoint, but the oldest mutant remains Apocalypse, who was born in Egypt during the 30th century BC.

There were numerous mutant sightings before the X-Men burst onto the scene in 1963; there was an illusion-creating mutant in 1953′s Man Comics #28 (why doesn’t Marvel bring back THAT title?), as well as in 1959′s Journey Into Mystery #52. Of all the stories, probably the one that veers closest to what become the X-Man/mutant struggle came one year prior to the X-Men, in the pages of Adult Fantasy #14 from 1964. In it, Stan Lee and Steve Ditko tell a story of a man with immense telepathic powers who tries to sequester himself away from society to avoid the noise of other people’s minds. Overstreet Price Guide goes so far as to call this a “Professor X prototype story,” even though Ditko never drew an X-Men page in his life.


June 29, 2011 @ 09:31 AM by Chris ArrantTagged: marvel comics, mutants, x-men 5 CommentsKurt BusiekJune 29, 2011 at 9:46 am

X-MEN #6 brings up the possibility that Namor could be a mutant, but doesn’t confirm it — Xavier just wonders if he might be, and Magneto has a skeevy Atlantean tell him he is without any particular evidence. In the lettercols at the time, Stan decided Namor was a “non-mutant hybrid cross,” or some such. The issue didn’t arise again for years, but Namor was treated as a hybrid, not a mutant.

[And when it did arise, they had to do some hurried retconning to explain why Namora and Namorita had the very same mutation, if they were truly mutants.]

There was also a story about Chinese mutants in a Kirby-drawn issue of YELLOW CLAW; we wound up referencing it in MARVELS: EYE OF THE CAMERA #1.

Kurt BusiekJune 29, 2011 at 9:50 am

As for a Professor Xavier prototype story, I’d look to the SF prose work MUTANT, by Henry Kuttner, which features bald, telepathic, radiation-caused mutants fighting a secret war to protect humanity from evil mutants who want to enslave them all, but wary of a humanity that fears and hates them.

I’d bet that Stan and/or Jack (likely Jack) had read that, along with similar works, like SLAN by A.E. van Vogt and CHILDREN OF THE ATOM by Wilmar Shiras.

Al SchroederJune 29, 2011 at 10:31 am

Also there’s Olaf Stapledon’s ODD JOHN, one of the first treatments of the theme of homo superior—mutants who are the next step above man. I know it’s a very real influence on my webcomic, which sort of treads the same ground, even though my main character isn’t a mutant.—Al

WraithJune 29, 2011 at 11:11 am

“Marvel’s claim of Namor being ‘Marvel’s First Mutant’ are true from a publication debut standpoint, but the oldest mutant remains Apocalypse, who was born in Egypt during the 30th century BC.”

Thank you for pointing this out. Heaven knows why, but it bugs me every time Marvel splash “First Mutant” on a Namor story.

JulianJune 29, 2011 at 2:57 pm

When did the first mutant monster show up in comics? Had to be before Wierd Science. Did they ever show up in Flash Gordon or any Sunday Supplements?

Leave a CommentYour Name: *

Email Address: (not published) *

Website:

 
 Robot 6About Robot 6Submit a Link / Contact Robot 6  ECHOES-->SubscribeEmailFacebookTwitterSearch Robot 6




-->

comics (10)strangeways (2)Uncategorized (7577) -->Robot 6 Links Can’t Wait for WednesdayComics A.M.Comics CollegeEveryone’s a CriticFood or ComicsGorillas Riding DinosaursGrumpy Old FanRobot ReviewsShelf PornSix by 6Slash PrintStrangewaysTalking Comics with TimThe Fifth ColorThe Middle GroundTrinity AnnotationsUnboundWhat Are You Reading?Your Mileage May VaryYour Wednesday Sequence Browse the Robot 6 Archives Select Month June 2011  (222) May 2011  (215) April 2011  (234) March 2011  (230) February 2011  (211) January 2011  (238) December 2010  (199) November 2010  (203) October 2010  (271) September 2010  (235) August 2010  (232) July 2010  (321) June 2010  (221) May 2010  (241) April 2010  (328) March 2010  (330) February 2010  (246) January 2010  (273) December 2009  (297) November 2009  (235) October 2009  (269) September 2009  (228) August 2009  (230) July 2009  (339) June 2009  (253) May 2009  (239) April 2009  (251) March 2009  (279) February 2009  (248) January 2009  (261)

Home | News | Columns | Reviews | Find A Comic Shop | CBR Forums

© 1995 - 2011 Comic Book Resources. All Rights Reserved.

RSS | Privacy Policy

Report a Bug | Advertising | Contact

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Marvel cartoons coming to Netflix streaming

Tweet

Marvel announced late last week that a bunch of their classic cartoons are being released for Netflix streaming. Actually, “a bunch” is an understatement. It’s just about everything:

Available Now

The Incredible Hulk (1996-97)
Spider-Man Unlimited (1999-2001)
Iron Man: Extremis – Marvel Knights Animation (2010)
Astonishing X-Men: Gifted – Marvel Knights Animation (2010)
Spider-Woman: Agent of the S.W.O.R.D. – Marvel Knights Animation (2010)
Fantastic Four: World’s Greatest Heroes (2006)
Silver Surfer (1998)
Black Panther – Marvel Knights Animation (2010)
Iron Man: Armored Adventures Season 1 (2009)

Coming throughout the summer

Marvel Action Hour: Iron Man (1994-96)
The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes! Season 1 (2010)
X-Men Evolution (2000-3)
X-Men (1992-7)
Spider-Man (1994-‘98)
Spider-Man (1967-‘68)
Spider-Man and his Amazing Friends (1981)
Spider-Man (1981-‘82)

Coming this fall

Iron Man (1966)
Thor (1966)
Captain America (1966)
Hulk (1966)
Sub-Mariner (1966)

And they promise that there’s “much more” on the way.


May 5, 2011 @ 12:00 PM by Michael MayTagged: Marvel, marvel animation, netflix 9 CommentsKayelMay 5, 2011 at 12:31 pm

AWESOME but….where’s the 90′s Ironman and FF4 cartoons? :(

Nick MarinoMay 5, 2011 at 1:00 pm

@Kayel – The 90s Iron Man is up there as Marvel Action Hour: Iron Man. But the 90s FF is definitely missing… which is not necessarily a bad thing, per se.

I WISH the friggin’ X-Men stuff was up there a while back when I started this ridiculous X-Men TV show review marathon thing I’m doing. The Marvel site, while commendable for posting most of these on there, can sometimes be a nightmare to navigate.

Also, Marvel recently semi-removed Avengers: EMH from their site, which I discovered last weekend. Sometimes the vids can be found if you dig really hard, but the they pretty much wiped out all the normal paths to locate them. Kinda odd if you ask me.

NathanMay 5, 2011 at 1:13 pm

I have already gotten through the Black Panther series and just started the Spider-Woman series. Those are easy to catch on the fly as they are only 10 minutes an episode.

WraithMay 5, 2011 at 1:22 pm

Well, “they promise that there’s ‘much more’ on the way.” Presumably this includes the Marvel Action Hour Fantastic Four, in all its hilariously-atrocious-rap-number glory. Can’t wait!! :-D

MrMGUMay 5, 2011 at 2:41 pm

I hope “much more” also includes some live-action stuff too. Not just the Hulk TV series, but Spidey (American and Japanese), Dr. Strange movie, Cap theatrical and TV movies of the 80s/90s, Hasslehoff as Nick Fury. Generation X.

Also, the 80s Spider-Woman, The Thing (“Thing Ring, do your thing”), FF with Herbie. And the MTV Spidey series. and the direct-to-video animated movies. Electric Company Spidey, too.

Then DC needs to spin-off their upcoming Cartoon Network block into a full-fledged animation and live-action channel.

That’s all I want.

HDOMay 5, 2011 at 3:25 pm

Neither Extremis nor Astonishing X-Men worked on my Wii though. Stupid Wii.

Simon DelMonteMay 5, 2011 at 4:09 pm

No season two of Spectacular Spider-Man? That is a shame.

Mr. JRMay 5, 2011 at 6:27 pm

HDO:

I had a similar issue trying to play Black Panther, Hulk, and Silver Surfer through my Blu-Ray player. They didn’t even show up on the displayed queue for about 3-4 days even though they played fine on my desktop. There was a reviewer commenting about having a similar problem with Spider-Woman on his Xbox as well, so it doesn’t seem to be an isolated circumstance, but it is being addressed so you may want to try again.

stealthwiseMay 5, 2011 at 7:05 pm

Only thing I’m remotely interested in is Spectacular Spider-Man.

Leave a CommentYour Name: *

Email Address: (not published) *

Website:

 
 Robot 6About Robot 6Submit a Link / Contact Robot 6  ECHOES-->SubscribeEmailFacebookTwitterSearch Robot 6




-->

comics (9)strangeways (2)Uncategorized (7180) -->Robot 6 Links Can’t Wait for WednesdayComics A.M.Comics CollegeEveryone’s a CriticFood or ComicsGorillas Riding DinosaursGrumpy Old FanRobot ReviewsShelf PornSix by 6Slash PrintStrangewaysTalking Comics with TimThe Fifth ColorThe Middle GroundTrinity AnnotationsUnboundWhat Are You Reading?Your Mileage May VaryYour Wednesday Sequence Browse the Robot 6 Archives Select Month May 2011  (40) April 2011  (234) March 2011  (230) February 2011  (211) January 2011  (238) December 2010  (199) November 2010  (203) October 2010  (271) September 2010  (235) August 2010  (232) July 2010  (321) June 2010  (221) May 2010  (241) April 2010  (328) March 2010  (330) February 2010  (246) January 2010  (273) December 2009  (297) November 2009  (235) October 2009  (269) September 2009  (228) August 2009  (230) July 2009  (339) June 2009  (253) May 2009  (239) April 2009  (251) March 2009  (279) February 2009  (248) January 2009  (261)

Home | News | Columns | Reviews | Find A Comic Shop | CBR Forums

© 1995 - 2011 Comic Book Resources. All Rights Reserved.

RSS | Privacy Policy

Report a Bug | Advertising | Contact